Madam, want to talk about author Mary Stewart? discussion
Mary's Romantic Suspense Novels
>
Airs Above the Ground
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Pat
(new)
Sep 21, 2010 08:38AM

reply
|
flag


I guess the only thing that bothered me was the over-long tedious chase that took place. I was exhausted reading through it, but maybe that was what Mary intended. I guess I just wanted the book to continue on at a slow easy pace and learn more about Austria, the horses and the traveling circus.
I don't know which books you are referring to, Carol, but maybe someone who comes on here will know.

Carol, perhaps you are thinking of The Winding Stair by Jane Aiken Hodge? I love her books, and several were set in Portugal. About 15 years ago I came across a beautiful book of Portuguese tiles and sent it to her with a fan letter, and got a lovely response which I treasure.

I really appreciated the book even more after I saw the Lippizzaner Stallions when they were on tour. They performed one show in my city and it was amazing. I went home and reread Airs the next day. After seeing the stallions in person it made the performance of the old horse so much more real and meaningful to the story because I understood more what the moves looked like.
CLM - it is funny you should mention Jane Aiken Hodge writing books about Portugal. When I was younger I was a big fan of her sister Joan Aiken who has written a series of YA books set in Spain. I wonder if the two of them lived on the Iberian peninsula at one time.


Glad you remembered your author, Carol :)

Glad you re..."
Oh, I'd love to see them. Moonspinners and Nine Coaches are still my favorite but I haven't finished them all yet. Keep getting side-tracked.
I have the Jane Aikens Hodge book mentioned somewhere. That will be my first.

I've read and loved Peking Picnicand Illyrian Spring by Ann Bridge. But I think they're a very different type of book from those you mention; the author biog on GR says she wrote "novels which take as the background of their protagonists' emotional lives a serious investigation of modern historical developments", which is what the ones I read are like, and also "thrillers centred on a female amateur detective", which sound more like yours.


Louise wrote: "I love this one for the lyrical descriptions of the horses, it is really as much a horse story as anything."

sorry for the off topic!

I"ve seen a lot of odd things on GR, but not that particular odd thing!

https://d-nb.info/1256091588/34
It tells how the Lipizzaners were saved after World War II.



Books mentioned in this topic
Peking Picnic (other topics)The Episode at Toledo (other topics)
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (other topics)
Illyrian Spring (other topics)
The Portuguese Escape (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ann Bridge (other topics)Ann Bridge (other topics)
Joan Aiken (other topics)